Hoffenheim coach Julian Nagelsmann made a bold call, dropping Sandro Wagner for the first time this season. Within seven minutes, however, the young coach's call had been vindicated: Wagner's replacement Adam Szalai latched onto Andrej Kramaric's pass to give the visitors an early lead. Four minutes later, the Hungarian turned provider, finding Kramaric on the left, who jinked into the box and finished calmly. Nagelsmann's troops remained in control, and after Serge Gnabry spurned Bremen's only first-half chance, Steven Zuber cut in again from the left and increased the visitors' lead minutes before the break.

The visitors were quickest out of the blocks in the second half, too: in a carbon copy of his earlier strike, Kramaric picked up the ball wide on the left, cut inside, and rifled his effort past Felix Wiedwald at the near post. Ermin Bicakcic added another from a Kerem Demirbay corner soon after, although the visitors cut the deficit when Theodor Gebre Selassie headed home on the hour-mark. Werder pushed for another consolation but Philipp Bargfrede's and Robert Bauer's late goals proved too little, too late to alter the complexion of the encounter.

Man of the match

Kramaric was his usual electric self all afternoon. His jinking run through midfield led to Szalai's opener, while the Croatian finished beautifully for Hoffenheim's second and fourth goals.

Talking point

Despite the resounding nature of this win, Borussia Dortmund's draw at Augsburg means that Hoffenheim need either to better Dortmund's result on the final day, or require a five-goal swing in order to finish third in the final automatic UEFA Champions League place.